Presidential
Executive
Judicial
Legislative
Constitution
100

This is how the President prevents a bill from becoming a law and checks legislative power.

What is the presidential veto?

100

This is how a President can address urgent issues quickly and without congressional approval.

What is an executive order?

100

The highest court in the United States.

What is the Supreme Court?

100

The name of a proposed law introduced in Congress.

What is a bill?

100

It protects freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly, and petition.

What is the first amendment?

200

This is the case that etablished judicial review, which gave the Supreme Court the power to check the constitutionality of a president's actions.

What is Marbury v. Madison?

200

This is how a President makes agreements with foreign nations without the U.S. Senate’s approval.

What is an executive agreement?

200

This power allows the Supreme Court to declare laws or actions unconstitutional.

What is judicial review?

200

This branch of government has the power to create laws.

What is the legislative branch?

200

This is the name of the first ten amendments to the Constitution.

What is the Bill of Rights?

300

This is the role of the president in which they meet with foreign leaders, negotiate treaties, shape foreign policy, and appoint ambassadors to represent the U.S. abroad.

What is the president’s role as Chief Diplomat?

300

This is the role of the president in which they are responsible for ensuring that laws are faithfully executed.

What is the president’s role as Chief Executive?


300

This power was introduced by Chief Justice John Marshall and allows the Supreme Court to decide whether laws and government actions abide by the constitution.

What is judicial review?

300

Before a bill becomes a law, it must be approved by both of these parts of Congress.

What are the House of Representatives and the Senate?

300

This compromise settled the debate over representation by creating two houses of Congress.

What is the Great Compromise?
400

This is the role that President Eisenhower used during Little Rock Arkansas when he sent troops Arkansas to uphold and enforce integration in education.

What is the president’s role as Commander in Chief?

400

This is was created by President FDR’s series of executive orders, which took immediate action to address the Great Depression.

What is the New Deal?

400

In this case, it was ruled that Virginia's law banning interracial marriage was unconstitutional by the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment. 

What is Loving v. Virginia?

400

If the President rejects a bill, this is what it is called.

What is a veto?

400

List three ways the US Constitution is different from the Articles of Confederation.

What are: it created a strong centralized government, established three branches of government, and allowed for federal taxation? (Other acceptable answers: included a Bill of Rights, solved interstate issues, made it easier to enact change)

500

This resolution was passed after the Vietnam War to limit the president’s power to deploy military forces without formal declaration of war from Congress.


What is the War Powers Act?

500

The power that President Nixon claimed to have during his Watergate scandal that would’ve allowed him to maintain confidentiality and would’ve justifed his refusal to hand over his audio tapes.

What is Executive Privilege?

500

This is the process that a case must go through before it is heard in the Supreme Court. Cases start off in lower courts. If the losing party is unsatisfied, they can file a request to send the case to the Supreme Court for review. 

What is the process of petitioning for certiorari?

500

If the president vetos a bill, Congress can still make it law with this fraction of votes in both houses.

What is a two-thirds majority?

500

The uprising that demonstrated the advantage of granting the federal government the power to levy taxes and proved the effectiveness of the Constitution.


What is the Whisky Rebellion?

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